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Roger, thanks for bringing this topic up. I would like to keep this topic in the Low Wattage circle, since it involves both your low power design approach and high efficiency speakers. Well done.
Impedance Converter to achieve 10 watts into any load.
http://www.atma-sphere.com/Resources/OTLs_Defined.phpRalph Karsten (who has visited here previously) seems to have some good info on his website, but it's clear that Ralph and Roger disagree on quite a bit. In the article above, Ralph says, "For many years the public has associated the weaknesses of the Futterman circuit with OTLs in general. Fortunately modern OTLs have solved the earlier problems of the Futterman by (for the most part) using entirely different circuitry. In fact, every manufacturer who has ever attempted to produce a Futterman amplifier has ultimately gone out of business".Regardless of this, having heard how good Roger's amps are, I'm interested in the new Music Reference OTL. Would like to learn more, if I could.
Does anyone have a good OTL primer for those of us without a background in this stuff?TIA
I use a small SET into a Stax step-up transformer into electrostats, e.g. Stax SR009 which has 145K impedance. http://www.wooaudio.com/headphones/stax/sr009.htmlWould this "impedance converter" work well with a Stax step-up transformer (such as SRD 7 Pro), or is there perhaps chance this impedance converter can be customized for electrostats somehow?
However I will say that a high voltage direct drive amp would be the ideal thing and I have made one for my STAX. Great phones BTW
This is your primer... What specifically do you want to know?
Perhaps rozenblits book beginners guide to tube audio design. I think his first otl is described there, good primer.
Have you considered making your Stax direct drive amp available commercially? Most Stax fans feel Stax currently does not make an amp capable of driving their top-line 'stats to their full potential (Omega II, SR009, etc), and capable third-party amps usually command long wait-times and large prices
If so, I'd love to see the inevitable forum war between Roger and Kevin Gilmore or Birgir
Kevin Gilmore is an amp designer in his spare time, and is basically the authority when it comes to modern electrostatic headphone amplification.His Blue Hawaii (http://headwize.com/?page_id=751/) is manufactured by Headamp (http://www.headamp.com/electrostat_amps/bhse/index.htm). There are a bunch more designs out there for DIY consumption, including a reverse-engineering of the Stax T2.Birgir goes by 'spritzer' on forums, is incredibly knowledgeable about electrostatic headphones and Stax history, and I would say informally heads up the Stax hobbyist community.To check out activity in this area don a flamesuit, keep your head low, and head over to www.head-case.org/OTL hijack